Chromosomal instability determines taxane response

  • Charles Swanton
  • Barbara Nicke
  • Marion Schuett
  • Aron C Eklund
  • Charlotte Ng
  • Qiyuan Li
  • Thomas Hardcastle
  • Alvin Lee
  • Rajat Roy
  • Philip East
  • Maik Kschischo
  • David Endesfelder
  • Paul Wylie
  • Se Nyun Kim
  • Jie-Guang Chen
  • Michael Howell
  • Thomas Ried
  • Jens K Habermann
  • Gert Auer
  • James D Brenton
  • Zoltan Szallasi
  • Julian Downward

Abstract

Microtubule-stabilizing (MTS) agents, such as taxanes, are important chemotherapeutics with a poorly understood mechanism of action. We identified a set of genes repressed in multiple cell lines in response to MTS agents and observed that these genes are overexpressed in tumors exhibiting chromosomal instability (CIN). Silencing 22/50 of these genes, many of which are involved in DNA repair, caused cancer cell death, suggesting that these genes are involved in the survival of aneuploid cells. Overexpression of these "CIN-survival" genes is associated with poor outcome in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer and occurs frequently in basal-like and Her2-positive cases. In diploid cells, but not in chromosomally unstable cells, paclitaxel causes repression of CIN-survival genes, followed by cell death. In the OV01 ovarian cancer clinical trial, a high level of CIN was associated with taxane resistance but carboplatin sensitivity, indicating that CIN may determine MTS response in vivo. Thus, pretherapeutic assessment of CIN may optimize treatment stratification and clinical trial design using these agents.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0027-8424
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 26.05.2009
PubMed 19458043